Funded Projects

Browse wide-ranging research at the frontiers of neuroscience supported by Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute grants, awards, and training fellowships.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2023
Tracking Parkinson’s Disease with transformer models of everyday looking behaviors

It is more common nowadays for people to have their own wearable devices to measure physiological signals like heart rate and respiration to keep track of physical diseases. However, monitoring decline in cognitive functions or development of neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinson’s (PD), is still complex and tricky.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2023
Microglia-Mediated Astrocyte Activation in Chronic Pain

While acute pain is an important biological signal in response to injured tissue, chronic pain occurs when the pain signaling outlasts the initial injury and has deleterious effects on health and quality of life. Chronic pain represents an enormous public health burden with few therapeutic options.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2017
Developing a dopamine and neural systems model of anhedonia

    More than 60 million people in the United States currently suffer from a serious mental illness, and the associated financial, productivity and human suffering costs are only projected to rise in the near future.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2015
Simultaneous 15O-PET and MRI of cerebral blood flow and cerebrovascular reserve

Continuous blood flow to the brain is needed for neural tissues to survive. Noninvasive imaging of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in humans is challenging, but is critically useful to understand normal brain physiology and to help patients with cerebrovascular disorders such as stroke.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2015
Determining the microstructural basis of diffusion MRI

The aim of this project is to improve the accuracy and reliability of dMRI fiber tracking through comparison with a gold standard that unambiguously relates the measured water diffusion patterns to the underlying tissue structure.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2018
Sustained release of growth factors from bioengineered synthetic "cells" for treating spinal cord injury

Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a debilitating condition that affects young adults between the ages of 16 and 30, which leads to lifelong medical and financial burdens. SCI still results in a decreased quality-of-life and lower life expectancy for patients. This is due in part to the lack of a regenerative-based therapeutic approach to treating SCI in the clinic.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2020
Reprogramming organismal lifespan through modulation of neuropeptidergic circuits

Aging is the number one risk factor for debilitating diseases such as neurodegeneration. Can manipulation of neurons in the brain alter the body’s physiological state to extend lifespan? Neuropeptides are key modulators of short-term homeostasis such as feeding, temperature, and sleep.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
SIGF - Graduate Fellowship
2020
How do Schwann cells sort and myelinate axons in the developing peripheral nervous system?

Schwann cells (SCs) sort and myelinate peripheral axons, and impairments in either process can cause long-term disability. There are no therapeutic strategies for targeting SC dysfunction, underscoring the need to investigate mechanisms of sorting and myelination. Both processes require highly motile SC cytoplasmic protrusions, but the basis of this motility is unclear.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
SIGF - Graduate Fellowship
2020
Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Epileptogenesis

Absence epilepsy is a form of pediatric epilepsy which causes seizures with brief lapses in awareness. Electron microscopy results in a murine model of absence epilepsy support the hypothesis that maladaptive myelination plays a role in disease progression.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
Interdisciplinary Scholar Award
2021
Mechanisms of myelin membrane expansion

Myelin is the protective covering that surrounds nerve fibers to accelerate communication between different parts of the nervous system. Damage to myelin occurs in diseases such as multiple sclerosis, which compromises nerve signaling and impairs motor and cognitive function.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
SIGF - Graduate Fellowship
2021
Design and development of a high-performance intra-cortical speech BCI

Many neurological injuries and diseases such as brainstem stroke and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) result in severe speech impairment, drastically reducing quality of life. Recent progress in brain-computer interfaces (BCI) has allowed these individuals to communicate, but performance is still far lower than typical spoken conversation speeds.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
SIGF - Graduate Fellowship
2022
Leveraging screenomics to identify mental illness: Detecting bipolar disorder through computational analysis of smartphone screen data

Mental illnesses like bipolar disorder affect millions of people around the world, but early symptoms are often difficult to detect. Working across the disciplines of clinical psychology, communication, and computer science, my research will develop a novel computational tool to identify signals of mania and depression in real-time.

Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute
SIGF - Graduate Fellowship
2022
Mechanistic insights into glycerophospholipid metabolism in the lysosome

Phospholipid dysregulation is implicated in the pathogenesis of lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs). We found that glycerophosphodiesters (GPDs) accumulate in lysosomes derived from Batten disease models, a life-limiting LSD whose pathological mechanism remains elusive. GPDs are the degradation products of glycerophospholipid catabolism by phospholipases.